Ericამერია, ცნობილი სომეხი გენერალი გუდერიანი ყოფილა მანშტეინის მაგივრად.
პოლონური კავალერია წავიდა ლაბავოიზე გერმანელების მოტომსროლელებზე.
სრული იდიოტიზმი ცხენები ტანკებზე მარა საქმე გააკეთეს.
Battle of Krojanty
Chojnice Krojanty Lasy Królewskie Mokra Pszczyna Grudziądz Mława Jordanów Fraustadt Węgierska Górka Tuchola Forest Częstochowa Mikołów Bukowiec Slovak invasion
Westerplatte Danzig Danzig Bay Worek Plan Gdynia Hel Kępa Oksywska
Tomaszów Mazowiecki Wizna Łódź Borowa Góra Piotrków Różan Pułtusk Radom Łomża Barak Wola Cyrusowa
The charge at Krojanty, battle of Krojanty,[1] the riding of Krojanty or skirmish of Krojanty[2] was a cavalry charge that occurred during the invasion of Poland in the Second World War. It took place on the evening of September 1, 1939, near the Pomeranian village of Krojanty. Polish soldiers advanced east along the former Prussian Eastern Railway to railroad crossroads 7 kilometres from the town of Chojnice (Konitz) where elements of the Polish cavalry charged and dispersed a German infantry battalion. Machine gun fire from German armoured cars that appeared from a nearby forest forced the Poles to retreat. However, the attack successfully delayed the German advance, allowing the Polish 1st Rifle battalion and Czersk Operational Group to withdraw safely.
Happening on the first day of the war, it was one of its first clashes, and part of the larger Battle of Tuchola Forest. The incident became notable as reporters visiting the site soon after saw the dead bodies of horses and cavalrymen which led to false reports of Polish cavalry attacking German tanks. Nazi propaganda[3] took advantage of this, suggesting that the Poles attacked intentionally, believing that the Germans still had the dummy tanks the Versailles treaty restrictions had permitted them. The scene of Polish cavalry charging the Panzers with their lances has become a modern-day myth.[4]
The battle
The 18th Pomeranian Uhlans spotted a group of German infantry resting in a clearing in the Tuchola Forest heath near the railroad crossroads of Chojnice – Runowo Pomorskie line.
Colonel Kazimierz Mastalerz decided to take the enemy by surprise and ordered Eugeniusz Świeściak, commander of the 1st squadron, to execute a cavalry charge at 1900 hours, leading two squadrons, about 250 strong. Most of the two other squadrons, and their TKS/TK3 tankettes, were held back in reserve.
The charge was successful: the German infantry unit was dispersed, and the Poles occupied the clearing. However, German armored reconnaissance vehicles appeared from the forest road, probably part of Aufklärungs-Abteilung 20, and soon the Polish units came under heavy machine gun fire, probably from Leichter Panzerspähwagen equipped with MG 34, or Schwerer Panzerspähwagen equipped also with a 20 mm gun. The Poles were completely exposed and began to gallop for cover behind a nearby hillock.[5]
Commander Świeściak was killed, as was Mastalerz, who tried to save him. About a third of the Polish force was dead or wounded. On the other hand, the German advance was halted long enough to allow the withdrawal of Polish 1st Rifle battalion and National Defence battalion Czersk from the nearby battle of Chojnice.
The Polish cavalry charge impressed the Germans and caused a delay in the offensive of the German 20th Motorised Infantry Division which considered a tactical retreat. This was however prevented by personal intervention of Gen. Guderian, who in his memoirs stated that he encountered his staff "wearing helmets, preparing an anti-tank gun for a possible Polish cavalry attack,"[6] and that "the panic of the first day of war was overcome quickly".[7]
ქაფქიანა
ეგ სალადინი მეფეების კოლექციას აგროვებდა თუ რა იყო

მანამდე რიჩარდ ლომგულს უგზავნა ექიმები და წამლები აგრას ციხეში.
დავარქვათ წიტელ ჯვარს სალადინის სახელი.
ნუ კი აგვახია იერუსალიმი მარა ჯანდაბას.
ისე ჰაშიშიუნების ეშინოდა მაგას.
მაგათმა შეფმა მაგარი გატროლა.
ეხლა წავიკიტხე კიდე და რა დურდომია.
ნეტა ჩვენ რას ვაკეთებდით ამ დროს?
რაღაც პერიოდში მოკავშირეებიც იყვნენ მგონი ეს ჰაშიშიუნები ჩვენი
Rashid ad-Din Sinan was born between the years 1132 and 1135 in Basra, southern Iraq, to a well to do family.[5] According to his autobiography, of which only fragments survive, Rashid came to Alamut, the centre of the Hashashins, as a youth after an argument with his brothers,[5] and received the typical Hashashin training. In 1162, the sect's leader Ḥassan
This post has been edited by A10 on 30 Aug 2018, 13:05